Pamela, Volume II eBook

My respects to all your good neighbours in general.
Mr. Longman will visit you now and then. Mrs.
Jervis will take one journey into Kent, she says,
and it shall be to accompany my babies, when carried
down to you. Poor Jonathan, and she, good folks!
seem declining in their health, which grieves me.—­Once
more, God send us all a happy meeting, if it be his
blessed will! Adieu, adieu, my dear parents! your
ever dutiful, &c.

LETTER XCIX

My Dear Lady G.,

I received your last letter at Paris, as we were disposing
every thing for our return to England, after an absence
of near two years; in which, as I have informed you,
from time to time, I have been a great traveller,
into Holland, the Netherlands, through the most considerable
province of France, into Italy; and, in our return
to Paris again (the principal place of our residence),
through several parts of Germany.

I told you of the favours and civilities we received
at Florence, from the then Countess Dowager of——­,
who, with her humble servant Lord C——­(that
had so assiduously attended her for so many months
in Italy), accompanied us from Florence to Inspruck.

Her ladyship made that worthy lord happy in about
a month after she parted from us, and the noble pair
gave us an opportunity at Paris, in their way to England,
to return some of the civilities which we received
from them in Italy; and they are now arrived at her
ladyship’s seat on the Forest.

Her lord is exceedingly fond of her, as he well may;
for she is one of the most charming ladies in England;
and behaves to him with so much prudence and respect,
that they are as happy in each other as can be wished.
And let me just add, that both in Italy and at Paris,
Mr. B.’s demeanour and her ladyship’s
to one another, was so nobly open, and unaffectedly
polite, as well as highly discreet, that neither Lord
C. who had once been jealous of Mr. B. nor the other
party, who had had a tincture of the same yellow
evil, as you know, because of the Countess, had so
much as a shadow of uneasiness remaining on the occasion.

Lord Davers has had his health (which had begun to
decline in England) so well, that there was no persuading
Lady Davers to return before now, although I begged
and prayed I might not have another little Frenchman,
for fear they should, as they grew up, forget, as I
pleasantly used to say, the obligations which their
parentage lays them under to dearer England.

And now, my dearest friend, I have shut up my rambles
for my whole life; for three little English folks,
and one little Frenchman (but a charming baby as well
as the rest, Charley by name), and a near prospect
of a further increase, you will say, are family enough
to employ all my cares at home.

I have told you, from time to time, although I could
not write to you so often as I would, because of our
being constantly in motion, what was most worthy of
your knowledge relating to every particular, and how
happy we all have been in one another. And I have
the pleasure to confirm to you what I have often written,
that Mr. B. and my Lord and Lady Davers are all that
I could wish and hope for, with regard to their first
duties. We are indeed a happy family, united by
the best and most solid ties!